http://www.bangaloremirror.com/article/81/2010090420100904205519203a6b75953/Lost-to-the-world.html


Lost to the world
Has India’s favourite music composer moved on to a bigger, global platform?
Chandrima.Pal
     
Posted On Saturday, September 04, 2010 at 08:55:19 PM
 
>From Internet blogs to the denizens of Delhi’s South Block, everyone is 
splitting hair over his compositions. But the man behind it all is ensconced in 
his Chennai studio, unfazed by the furore around him. Like the proverbial eye 
of 
the storm. 


For A R Rahman, these are the best of times, the worst of times. His art is at 
its most eclectic, garnering international acclaim heralding him as one of the 
world’s best. In his own country detractors are declaring that he has lost his 
touch. He is buying a five-acre plot in Los Angeles to set up his production 
facility with sound engineer Resul Pookutty. He is also being accused of being 
indifferent, aloof to his Bollywood projects, delaying them and churning out 
music that often stumps listeners. With every milestone in the West, Rahman 
seems to move a step away from home.

His fiercest critics are ironically in the industry that has given him his 
biggest successes — until of course Slumdog. The Hindi film fraternity has 
always had an uneasy relationship with Rahman, who is still god down south. 
Many 
in Bollywood find it hard to accept his artistic ways – he remains in Chennai, 
works mostly at night, has his own creative yardsticks for choosing projects 
and 
delivers only when he is ready.  Some feel his best is behind him, others feel 
he is constantly breaking new ground.

“Given his style of functioning and his inaccessibility,” says trade expert 
Amod 
Mehra, “Bollywood always had a problem working with him.” Rahman has never made 
any excuses for the way he functions. And his studio can seem forbidding, or 
inspiring.

“There is a divine energy there,” says Subhash Ghai, who has shared an 
emotional 
bond with the composer since his Shikhar days. “It is not your usual 
sharaab-kebab kind of atmosphere that you encounter in most Mumbai studios.”  
Ghajini-producer Madhu Mantena, who has worked closely with Rahman since 
Rangeela, too says watching the maestro in his studio is like entering a very 
sacred space.
CONSPIRACY THEORIES
But Rahman’s inaccessibility – which critics say has increased post his 
international-success – has not helped.

“If you are a newbie,” says a producer who has met the maestro and is still 
waiting for his verdict on his proposal. “You have to make at least 10 trips to 
his studio to discuss your project with him. Unlike other music composers, 
money 
is no criteria for him. There is no saying why or when he will pick one project 
over the other,” the producer adds.

“Now he is zipping around the world,” rues an ad filmmaker who is still waiting 
for a meeting, “it is almost impossible for one to get his time and consent.” 
Rubbishing these as conspiracy theories, Mantena points out that Rahman has 
worked with several newcomers including Abbas Tyrewala, whose Jaane Tu... he 
had 
accepted way before Aamir Khan came into the picture. 

“Besides, he is so dedicated to his work that each song probably goes through 
more changes than the script itself,” Mantena reveals, agreeing with other 
insiders like Ram Gopal Varma.  “No matter how pressured he is, Rahman will 
never let a tune pass until he is happy about it.”

On the flip side, that can translate into nail-biting moments for the 
always-in-a-tearing-hurry Bollywood producer. Thus, the notion that Rahman is 
delaying projects.

Mantena denies the maestro kept him waiting for months for the title track for 
his latest, Jhootha Hi Sahi.  “There are nine songs and the time taken was the 
same as any other album,” the producer says.

There were also rumours that the Jodhaa Akbar music launch was delayed because 
the soundtrack was not ready, though the label and the production house denied 
it. The Commonwealth Games theme took six months, and then it was back to the 
drawing board after the organising committee wanted Rahman to make changes.

“A single failure does not bring anyone down, not at least Rahman, who still 
has 
the mass with him,” says Mehra, referring to the Commonwealth controversy. 
“However, Rahman has not been showing his best elements on his recent works,” 
he 
adds.

“You cannot judge Rahman on the basis of one song,” says sitar maestro Pandit 
Kartick Kumar, who was featured in Rahman and Bharat Bala’s Jana Gana Mana 
project. Pandit Kumar worked with Pandit Ravi Shankar during Asiad ’82, when 
the 
sitar legend composed the then-hugely popular Swagatham. “People have been 
comparing that tune to what Rahman has created. It is not fair to compare a 
classic with a more contemporary track,” Pandit Kumar says. “But, yes, maybe 
Rahman should not have sung the song himself. Just because his Vande Mataram 
clicked, does not mean he can bring the same energy to every song he lends his 
voice to,” adds Kumar. 

The veteran sitar exponent puts it down to an unfortunate error of judgement by 
an otherwise superlative production designer and musician.
CRITICS VS LOYALISTS
Rahman’s world is divided into critics and loyalists. “It is every filmmaker’s 
dream to work with Rahman,” says director Anthony D’ Souza, who has graciously 
accepted all the brickbats for the mega-budget disaster called Blue. Critics 
flayed Blue’s Chiggy Wiggy, in which Rahman worked with one of the world’s 
biggest pop stars, Kylie Minogue.  “I am willing to do anything to have Rahman 
agree to my next,” D’Souza maintains.

Rahman loyalists say you cannot judge a Rahman tune instantly; it’s not fast 
food, it’s gourmet cuisine. Others seriously question whether he takes any real 
interest in the Bollywood projects any more.

Ram Gopal Varma, who gave Rahman his first Hindi break with his 1995-hit 
Rangeela, wrote in his blog about the making of the soundtrack: ‘...the 
compositions he came up with used to surprise me, though not always pleasantly. 
That is because his tunes were so original in his interpretation of the emotion 
of a situation that a conventional ear will take time to let it sink in.’
Mantena too believes Rahman’s style is so ‘different’ that it shocks you the 
first time.  “It depends a lot on what you have been used to listening to,” 
adds 
the producer.

 “Rahman has always maintained he cares less about how the music is received 
and 
more about being true to the project,” says Mehra. “And while in the past his 
musical instincts have served him well, something seems to be going wrong 
now.”  
The evolution of Rahman from the man who made hummable, instantly likeable 
tunes 
to someone who makes stylised and challenging music that often leaves you 
scratching your head on first listen, has coincided with his exposure to the 
best in the West. Sagar Desai, composer, sound designer of Quickgun 
Murugan-fame, has an explanation: “May be Rahman does not feel obliged to make 
tunes that appeal to the humble rickshawwallah anymore, but is more interested 
in staying true to his artistic core, no matter what the consequences.” 

There’s no denying Rahman is one of the world’s busiest musicians. He has 
toured 
across continents – including trying to put up a Michael Jackson-esque show in 
his last aborted US tour – worked on some of the world’s biggest projects, with 
the world’s biggest names. He has also delivered at least 60 soundtracks 
(Hindi, 
Tamil, Telugu, you name it), with a hit or three in every one of them. But 
increasingly, the misses have piled up. Has Rahman — who once admitted to being 
bad at multitasking — spread himself too thin?

“When Rahman was working for Taal,” says Ghai, “he was completely immersed in 
the craft of composing. But while working with him on Yuvraaj, I realised he 
was 
probably having trouble focusing with so much on his plate these days. You 
cannot blame him. He is an explorer who is hungry for more and wants to 
discover 
new sounds and new techniques. You have to allow him to grow. May be there are 
not enough challenges for him here.”

One of Rahman’s biggest contributions to the Indian music industry is the way 
he 
has treated musicians, who often feel short-changed by most composers.

“What makes him stand apart from the others is his ability to understand a 
musician and his comfort zone,” says Neil Mukherjee, who has played guitar for 
Rahman over seven years on several projects. “He will never make you feel 
uncomfortable.” And this quality of empathy, feels Mukherjee, is also tied to 
the maestro’s strong spiritual leanings. 

But in the chop and change world of Indian film music, you cannot survive on 
spirituality. “He is extremely spiritual and sharp at the same time,” says 
Ghai. 
“He is like Lord Krishna.”

Rahman’s demanding the lion’s share of the music publishing rights for his 
films 
has not earned him too many well-wishers in the industry. The Om Shanti Om 
music 
composer shift (from Rahman to Vishal-Shekhar) was because Rahman wanted part 
of 
the music royalty rights. “Any change is frowned at,” he said then, “I am 
standing up for what I think is right.” 

Ghai also says Rahman has become tech savvy, worldly wise over the years: “I 
have seen him update his gadgets and consoles after every six months, and 2001 
onwards [post-Lagaan], I have seen him get increasingly clued into what is 
happening across the world. He is the best we have. Sometimes the artiste 
becomes much bigger than his art. You can’t help it.”

Recent Rahman

CWG Anthem
Only for Rahmaniacs

Robot
Hit in south, crashing elsewhere

Raavan
Confusing

Blue
Mixed, mostly negative

Slumdog Millionaire
Global phenomenon, but perplexing at home

Delhi 6
Acclaimed

Jaane Tu...
Pappu made India dance

Yuvvraj
Better than the film

Ghajini
Mixed response

Jodhaa Akbar
Esoteric, classy

Sivaji
Fans rejoiced, few takers elsewhere 


      

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